It may be high time America sobered up from their year long Obama kool-aid drinking spree. Wipe your mouth on your sleeve, sit up, wake up and grab a cup of hard black coffee, preferably an espresso double shot. You are going to need to be alert for what you are about to see.

What only a handful of writers & researchers in the USA 9-11 truth movement and the global citizen journalism community knew last year is now becoming common knowledge. We were sold a bill of goods in Barack Obama, and we need to do something about it before he rolls out any more socialist fascist legislation that hurts the American people even more than they have already been hurt.

Whether or not Obama looks good in a Gucci suit, speaks with the eloquence of a Greek God, intones “Yes We Can” such that huge audiences, hypnotized, intone it with him, whether or not he suffers from a clinical pathology known in psychiatry as Narcissistic Personality Disorder, aka NPD, whether or not he actually used his skills in neurolinguistic programming to aid in his bid to win the White House, and whether or not his mother was a communist and Wiccan witch in secret, his numbers are falling. The honeymoon is over. America voted in a potluck election, not knowing what she might get, and now she is finding out. Let’s examine some of the hard bitter truths that other Americans are discovering, fully one year too late.

The latest Rasmussen daily tracking poll shows that President Barack Obama for the first time has a negative approval index — more Americans disapprove of his job performance than approve.

In an exclusive Newsmax interview, pollster Scott Rasmussen also disclosed that, if the economy does not improve over the next year, Obama’s numbers will deteriorate even further — and Democrats will suffer in 2010.

Rasmussen is founder and CEO of Rasmussen Reports and co-founder of the sports network ESPN. He has been an independent public opinion pollster for over a decade, and most major news organizations cite his reports..

Newsmax.TV’s Ashley Martella asked Rasmussen for an overview of the latest tracking poll.

“Before the last week we never had a circumstance where the number who disapprove outweigh the number who approve. So we’re in new territory. Right now the approval index, at minus two, is as low as it’s been.

“What we’ve seen in the last month is a growing number of people who strongly disapprove, and we’re seeing it at a time when the president’s honeymoon is coming to an end and people are beginning to look at the policies that he’s promoting.”

The closeness of the approve/disapprove numbers are “yet another indicator of how evenly divided our nation is,” he added.

On specific issues, Rasmussen disclosed:

“When we talk about healthcare reform and the proposal the president is talking about, the country is fairly evenly divided. But those who have strong opinions tend to oppose the plan more than support it.

“Right now those things are weighing the president down.. What’s going to tell over the next year is how the economy performs. If a year from today, GM is doing great and throwing off profits and getting the taxpayers their money back, people will say we were wrong, the president was right, and it’s great for him. But if GM is back asking for more bailouts, the president’s numbers will be substantially weaker than they are today . . .

“If the economy responds negatively over the next year, it is going to hurt the Democrats in 2010.

“What the passage of legislation will actually do is bring ownership of the economy and economic performance more and more into Barack Obama’s camp.

“Just over a month ago, 62 percent of Americans said that no matter what’s happened in the last six months, George Bush is still more to blame for the economic mess than Barack Obama. That number fell to 54 percent, and the more of Obama’s policies that are put in place, the more the blame or perhaps the credit will shift to the current president.”

Rasmussen also found:

The country is evenly split between those who approve of the way Obama has responded to the disputed elections in Iran and the repression of demonstrations that followed, and those who disapprove and believe he has not been aggressive enough.

About 30 percent of Americans favor a single-payer healthcare system, but a majority will oppose it.

“Americans like the idea of healthcare reform in theory, in the abstract,” Rasmussen said.

“Only 35 percent think this system is in good or excellent shape. But people like the coverage they get by themselves. Among the insured, 70 percent say their own coverage is good or excellent. Among all Americans, only 8 percent say their coverage is poor.”